Friday, June 29, 2012

MOWM 5: Your Poor, Poor Man

The other day I saw "The Five-Year Engagement". I thought it was really funny and I enjoyed it.
But, a few days later, I actually caught myself thinking about some aspects of the movie (not something I usually do with comedies) and I realized that the movie was full of annoying stereotypes. Sure, you'll say, stereotypes are what makes movies funny! True, but not when they hit close to home.


*SPOILER ALERT*
If you haven't seen the movie and plan to, stop reading now.

Tom and Violet live in San Francisco and get engaged at the beginning of the movie. Tom is a chef at a fancy San Francisco restaurant, while Violet seems to be a PhD in psychology, awaiting an offer of unspecified type from UC Berkeley. Instead, she gets an offer from the University of Michigan to go do a postdoc; they move and it all but destroys their relationship.

Let's put aside the fact that research in Violet's group is presented as a total joke; in the light of that, it makes it hard to believe Violet when she says she's worked so hard to get to the top of her field and that she would not want to quit now, that academia is her life... In my opinion,  all academic life is, almost invariably, depicted very inaccurately in movies. But, that is a topic for another post, or perhaps a series, and is not what I want to talk about...

First, very stereotypically, going to Michigan is portrayed as the ultimate in LAAAAAAAME. I am really sick of seeing how life is worth living only in New York, LA, or San Francisco; move anywhere else and you might as well blow your brains out, 'cause your life is totally over. First, Tom can't find a job except at a sandwich shop ('cause there are a total of 5 restaurants in Ann Arbor and there are presumably no other restaurants in the Detroit metro area. People are allowed to enjoy food only in coastal cities.) There is a scene where the whole crew at a restaurant gathers to laugh at Tom for having had a job in San Francisco and having left it to move "here".

The people Tom and Violet meet are fat, bearded, ugly, and terribly dressed. One of Tom's new friends is a male spouse of a University of Michigan faculty member; the guy complains about being a stay-at-home dad, talks about being emasculated by his position (within 10 seconds of meeting Tom at a party), and takes up knitting of the most hideous, misshapen sweaters known to humankind (apparently, that's what people wear in Michigan. 'Cause it's that lame.) 


But what got me the most is how downtrodden Tom became about leaving his fancy restaurant job in SF, moving to the seemingly ueber-lame Ann Arbor. He grows unkempt facial hair, starts hunting deer with his hideous-sweater-sporting buddies and makes all-deer meals, looks like he doesn't shower, and is generally just a pathetic mess. All this because his job at a sandwich shop (which by the way several people in the movie say they love) is such an unbearable step down from the fancy restaurant he worked at before. And let's not forget all the snow, which we also know makes life unworthy of living. 


This is what completely disgusts me: it's totally OK to ask women to leave their careers and dreams to follow their partners, and nobody bats an eyelash. Violet's sister lectures Violet how she, the sister, who by the way got knocked up accidentally by a total doofus, is now happy and fulfilled being a stay-at-home mom to the doofus's two kids and has given up her aspirations to be a kinesiologist, and that's totally the way to go.  But when a man follows a woman's career, then he invariably must turn into a useless, pathetic, smelly ballast. Forget about supporting your female partner, or showering and shaving for that matter. Passive-aggressive petulance FTW! 


* end of spoiler*

This movie reminded me of an encounter at a conference that I had gone to a little while before I graduated with a PhD. A senior professor from another university asked what I planned on doing when I graduate, I said I wanted to be a professor, and he told me I should not do that, that I should let my husband find work, and I should stay home and take care of the kids. If looks could kill, that man would have been struck by lightning and pulverized on the spot. I don't know what I said, it was to the effect that I didn't do a PhD do be a housewife, but I was very visibly pissed, so much that he hastily excused himself and left. 

In the coming years, I encountered several people who basically told me "Your poor husband!" when I informed them I was taking a faculty position and that my husband would be joining me (his staff job placement was part of my offer). Sure, my poor, poor husband; it totally sucks to have a job in your field waiting for you at the place where your spouse also has one. 


I think my husband is probably the person with the highest job satisfaction that I know. He looooves his job. He does a combination of lab work and teaching, the job is not a high-stress one, and he can quit at 5 pm, come home, and not think about it till the next work day. I cannot imagine he could find another job that he would love quite as much. Implying that we would both be happier if he had to be the sole bread-winner, working in a very fast-paced industry, while I were at home with the kids, is completely ludicrous; such an arrangement would have destroyed us both.


News flash: not every man wants to be a corporate drone, and not every woman wants to be a stay-at-home mom. There are many men who are perfectly happy as stay-at-home parents or in jobs that are less high-powered than those of their female partners. Implying that men are incapable of being supportive of their spouse's careers or the family in general without turning into a quivering, whiny pile of guilt-inducing crap is nothing but misandric patriarchal bullshit.













11 comments:

Anonymous said...

I'm actually moving to Ann Arbor (which is a totally lovely place!) in the fall to get my PhD in Astrophysics, and my boyfriend is coming with me. As such, this movie frustrated me in so many ways. It really sucked that them moving to accomodate her career had to be portrayed so miserably.

Anonymous said...

I love this post and I'm glad I never saw the movie. As a PhD student whose husband has already made the move to join her and whose husband WAY more enjoys domestic life and low-stress jobs than I do, I can totally relate.

hush said...

Great post, and I will not being seeing this movie because I know it would piss me off! ;)

Comrade Physioprof said...

Excellent post! Although I'm biased, because my wife's jobbe is a lot more high-powered than mine, and we are both very happy with thatte.

Cherish said...

I don't know what to say other than this is the best post I've read in a long time. :-)

Shedding Khawatir said...

Hmm, despite leaving a coastal city to follow me to a midwestern location my husband has not stopped showering or started knitting ugly sweaters or hunting deer. Nor have any of the other following husbands in my field (this is very common at least in my program) although they do do crazy things like enjoy their lives :-)

Alex said...

In my opinion, all academic life is, almost invariably, depicted very inaccurately in movies.

Is there any job or career path that isn't depicted inaccurately in movies?

It is particularly funny that a college town would be portrayed as inhospitable to a sophisticated chef. If anything, college towns have a lot of foodies.


Also, I wonder if CPP's wife's job brings in enough income to buy him some spell-check software.

I'll translate that into CPP-speak:

I wonderre if CPP's wiffeee's jobbe brinnggs in enoughhe income to buyye himme somme spelle-checkke softtewarre.

Alyssa said...

Great post! I kind of want to see the movie just because I've heard all sorts of awful things about how academic life is portrayed.

GMP said...

Let me take off my righteous pants and admit that I quite enjoyed the movie when I saw it (it's just that I got ticked off after the fact, thinking about it some more). I actually recommend that people go see it because (a) I am just one person on the internet, so what do I know and you should go and decide for yourselves, and (b) there were many really funny jokes; I laughed out loud in the movie theater.

Emily Blunt (Violet) and Jason Segel (Tom) are very relaxed around each other, they are a joy to watch (they must be really good friends in real life). The supporting cast is excellent and they are colorful, carry a significant weight in the movie, and are at the center of many really funny bits (e.g. Violet's fellow postdocs are hilarious.)

*SPOILER ALERT*

My favorite skit was Violet and her sister taking to each other like Cookie Monster and Elmo, respectively, to humor the sister's daughter, and the topic is relationships. They are pretty hilarious, and Elmo makes an insightful observation to Cookie Monster regarding choosing a partner: "There is no perfect cookie. Just pick one and take a bite!"

*END SPOILER*

Overall, the whole movie feels like a typical Jason Segel character: it's a big, heartwarming movie, giving you a bear hug. You may be suffocating a little, but can't help but feel all warm and fuzzy inside.

Anonymous said...

Great post! Both things you describe - assuming men must be the primary bread-winner or they'll never be ok and assuming that anywhere that isn't a city (and the right city) on the coast is a dump are infuriatingly common in movies and in broader life. I did grad school in Ann Arbor and have lived on both coasts - Ann Arbor is the nicest place I've lived and has some amazing food. The 'fly-over country' stuff makes me crazy. My husband has followed me for my career and it isn't always easy but we're doing ok.

Susan said...

I put this movie in my blind spot for two reasons.

First, the career aspect that you've covered so well. I'm moving for a t-t job in a month, and my partner is coming with me. We'll do the best we can to find my partner a job once we're there. I'm female, he's male. The trailer for this movie was enough to make me ignore it.

Second, on top of the career sexism, it piles on the whole Princess/Wedding thing. Because that's Every Girl's goal, right, the Wedding? And what a drag, she had to endure her Wedding being delayed for how long? Anyway, in my own life, we are happily, committed unmarrieds. High on my list of reasons not to get married is avoiding a Wedding. And guess what, I'm a whole functioning human being without being married!